Commercial Paper
The Financial Times Joins the "Ban Physical Cash" Chorus
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 08/31/2015 11:36 -0500This is just the beginning. As Central Bankers grow more and more desperate in the coming months, you’ll see more and more calls for extreme measures such as banning physical cash or imposing a “carry tax” on those who remove cash from the system.
Aug 21 - Greek PM Tsipras Resigns, Calls Snap Elections
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 08/20/2015 17:14 -0500News That Matters...
Central Banks Are Beginning to Lose Control
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 08/12/2015 08:50 -0500The significance of these developments cannot be overstated. Central Banks will be increasingly acting against one another going forward. There will more surprises and more volatility across the board. Eventually it will culminate in a Crash that will make 2008 look like a picnic.
When the Next Crisis Hits, the Monetary Gates Will Close on Accounts
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 08/06/2015 08:50 -0500Accounts will be frozen, and funds will be shut.
Creditors May Have To Hire Pirates To Seize Oil Ship From "Deadbeat" Ex-Billionaire
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/04/2015 16:00 -0500"The costs of executing the collateral are very high unless creditors send pirates from Algeria to go and get the vessel."
Volatility Vacuum - The Market Has Not Been Kept Honest
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/23/2015 08:29 -0500With a central bank following an asset inflation policy the flows are following performance. The Fed has unknowingly created winners and losers in the asset management business on a massive scale. The asset inflation environment also creates a volatility vacuum. Volatility is necessary to keep markets honest and provide long term stability. An investor must truly believe in their investment and must have performed significant due diligence to have the confidence to ride out the volatility. The market that is not kept honest is the one where reckless behavior proliferates, because it works and is profitable. The most prominent example is the massive carry trading that occurred during the last tightening cycle.
What Do Greece and Louisiana Have in Common? The War on Cash
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 07/22/2015 17:44 -0500The Centralized Powers have declared a War on Cash... and it is spreading throughout the globe.
Pension Shocker: Plans Face $2 Trillion Shortfall, Moody's Says
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/18/2015 22:20 -0500"Moody’s, which in 2013 began using a lower rate than governments do to calculate future liabilities, has estimated that the 25 largest U.S. public pensions alone have $2 trillion less than they need", Bloomberg reports.
Santa Cruz County Votes To Cease Doing Business With 5 TBTF Mega Banks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/15/2015 12:40 -0500It appears that Ryan Coonerty, the Supervisor of the Third District of Santa Cruz County, wrote a letter back in June to the rest of the Board of Supervisors, in which he bravely pleaded the county cease business operations with five of the TBTF Wall Street Mega Banks. Why you ask? Well, because they are criminal felons. Considering Eric Holder refused to punish them, someone has to take a stand...“There seems to be no limit to the greed in some our nation’s largest banks. I believe it is critical that the County only work with the most trustworthy institutions as we invest and protect the public’s tax dollars. Santa Cruz County should not be involved with those who rigged the world’s biggest financial markets."
Exclusive: The Inside Story Of How Deutsche Bank "Deals With" Whistleblowers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2015 17:15 -0500On November 7, 2011 Dr. Eric Ben-Artzi walked into a conference room at Deutsche Bank’s U.S. headquarters in lower Manhattan. Seated at a conference table was Sharon Wilson from the Human Resources department. Lars Popken, DB’s head of market risk methodology and Ben-Artzi’s manager, was videoconferenced in. Ben-Artzi’s job, Popken said, was being moved to Germany. Ben-Artzi thought back to the summer when, in response to rumors that some U.S. positions were likely to be moved overseas, he had mentioned he’d be happy to relocate to Berlin. No such luck. Minutes later, he was terminated and Wilson hurriedly ushered him out of the building. Ben-Artzi wasn’t even allowed to collect his personal belongings.
Are Central Bankers Poised To Break The World Again?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2015 11:26 -0500In his Pulitzer-Prize-winning book, Lords of Finance, the economist Liaquat Ahamad tells the story of how four central bankers, driven by staunch adherence to the gold standard, “broke the world” and triggered the Great Depression. Today’s central bankers largely share a new conventional wisdom – about the benefits of loose monetary policy. Are monetary policymakers poised to break the world again?
Systemic "Holidays" Are Coming to Banks, Money Market Accounts and More in the Weeks Ahead
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 07/08/2015 11:21 -0500As the next Crisis unfolds, it will more and more difficult to get your money out of the financial system.
Moody's, Fitch Fret Over Billions In Student Loan ABS As Defaults Loom
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/27/2015 14:50 -0500The fact that Moody's and Fitch are beginning to reevaluate student loan ABS is indicative of an underlying shift in the market. Between the proliferation of IBR and the Department of Education's recent move to open the door for debt forgiveness in the wake of the Corinthian collapse, financial markets are beginning to see the writing on the wall. Perhaps Bill Ackman said it best: "there's no way students are going to pay it all back."
The Warren Buffett Economy, Part 5: Why Its Days Are Numbered
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/16/2015 18:30 -0500Today’s style of heavy-handed monetary central planning destroys capitalist prosperity. Real capitalism cannot thrive unless inventive and enterprenurial genius is rewarded with outsized fortunes. Warren Buffett’s $73 billion net worth, and numerous like and similar financial gambling fortunes that have arisen since 1987, are not due to genius; they are owing to adept surfing on the $50 trillion bubble that has been generated by the central bank Keynesianism of Alan Greenspan and his successors.
Is Deutsche Bank The Next Lehman?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/13/2015 06:45 -0500Looking back at the Lehman Brothers collapse of 2008, it’s amazing how quickly it all happened. In hindsight there were a few early-warning signs, but the true scale of the disaster publicly unfolded only in the final moments before it became apparent that Lehman was doomed. Could this happen to Deutsche Bank?




